Talk:The R3-30

Latest comment: 10 years ago by 216.16.225.202 in topic This article is terribly outdated

Stumbled edit

I stumbled across this show the other day and looked back at some of the “top 30" lists and either this show is a fraud or joke of some sort, or it is being misrepresented here. The show is played across Canada and around the world on Sirius radio so true “listener feedback and requests” would reflect this kind of audience, yet a large percentage of the bands on the list, and even at the very top of the list, are completely obscure Toronto and Southern Ontario bands that are virtually unknown outside of Southern Ontario. Note that this show operates in an indie band context where Chad Van Gaalen and Matt Mayes are well known acts nationally, and Buck 65 and The New Pornographers are global superstars, yet 4 or 5 of the top bands on each list I’ve seen I’ve never heard of and virtually all of them have been from Toronto or Southern Ontario. After a searching for more information on them I found that most of these bands have made brief stays on the college charts, but the only place I can find that they are getting anywhere near this level of attention is on this show, and that essentially gives this away as a bogus list of some sort. Dave-

Try filling yourself in on what CBC Radio 3 is. Promoting "obscure" indie acts is the whole point of the station, so listener feedback is obviously going to be based on what people who like the station, and therefore are amenable to hearing and calling in to request bands that aren't yet that well known, are requesting to hear more of among "obscure" stuff that the station already plays and promotes. Prioritizing established acts like Matt Mays and Buck 65, who are already getting airplay on a dozen other Sirius channels as it is, isn't really what the station is about; publicizing and promoting emerging artists has always been the station's primary mission statement. And Sirius is not "around the world"; it's available only in Canada and the United States. I won't bother pointing out that a Wikipedia talk page is not the place to discuss your own personal opinion of the topic. Bearcat 05:18, 25 December 2006 (UTC)Reply
It’s very interesting, and I suspect very telling, that you are trying to fundamentally misrepresent the point I raised. But first some context for other readers here. The CBC is a public broadcaster in Canada and is paid for by taxpayers from coast to coast and it has a mandate as a network, as does CBC 3 as a channel, to fairly represent artists in all parts of Canada. Second, let me restate what I explained in my first post about obscurity. The indie scene is almost by definition obscure to many Canadians, but within the scene bands tour and they get attention and they get playing time on University and college radio stations and on other independent stations like CKUA and others. Bands like Shotgun & Jaybird and Great Aunt Ida are bands that have toured and are beginning to make a name for themselves in the national indie scene. They have become popular enough that they have spent a number of weeks on the national campus radio charts and to have risen quite high on those charts, and therefore they aren’t obscure to that audience anymore, although they are new to them. This is the kind of band that CBC's Radio 3 was meant to promote and take up another level in their exposure to a broader Canadian audience. Note also that this R3-30 list is played over the air on Radio 2 on Saturday evenings, which is where I first heard it, so it reaches a much larger and much different audience than it does on Sirius and globally on the internet, and for many of its listeners I’m sure it will be an introduction to the indie scene in Canada. Now, if we look at this R3-30 list, which this Wikipedia entry at least claims is a national list, a statement that was unreferenced I might add, we find in the top 10 alone 4 or 5 bands that will be virtually unknown outside Toronto, or perhaps Southern Ontario. They are bands that have made little and in some cases no impact at all on the national campus radio charts, or in any other national forum that I know of. These bands are obscure even in an indie context, and frankly there is nothing distinguishing about their music that would suggest they should have gotten more national attention. The point, however, is that this cannot possibly be a genuine national list as bands like Henri Faberge & The Adorables, Jon-Rae and the River, Jewish Legend, Uncut, Spiral Beach are virtually unknown outside of Toronto, presuming they are known to some extent even within Toronto. There wouldn’t be enough people outside of Toronto, even if we’re looking at the indie scene, who even know about these bands to vote them on to such a list, let alone get them into the top 10, let alone get 5 of them into the top 10. Also note that the recent lists have also included Tom Waits, who is clearly not a obscure Canadian indie artist by any definition, and Buck 65, a very big name indie artist even in the global context. Bearcat is clearly not only trying to be deceitful and spin what my stated concern was in a different direction, but he also doesn’t even appear to be familiar with what bands on the list, so I’ll just assume that he’s some kind of crank. The suggestion that R3-30 list is some kind of national list was unreferenced so I’ll delete it for the time being. Unfortunately the CBC Radio 3 website has been recently redone and I wasn’t able to quickly find a description of what the show is intended to be. I’ll keep looking as they work out the bugs in the site and if by some chance it does claim to be a national list then there is some serious fraud going on here and not only are Canadian taxpayers being cheated, but even more importantly Canadian indie musicians are being cheated, and I would find that truly despicable and I and every other fan of Canadian indie music should go up the ladder at the CBC and do our best to see that that fraud was put to an end. There is some truly great Canadian indie music being produced these days and deserving artists who have produced quality, original work, and who have done the touring to get their music established in the Canadian indie scene, very much deserve exposure on our public broadcaster, and if someone is manipulating a prominent indie forum on our public broadcaster to try to pass off a group of very marginal acts from his home region, acts that have not produced the same level of work and who have not earned the same kind of national indie audience, as some kind of nationally important or even nationally up and coming indie bands, then that is a fraud and an attack on Canadian independent music, and that is something that I and all Canadians concerned about Canadian music and culture should take very seriously. Back to the main point, however. This is clearly not a national list, and Bearcat’s behaviour and apparent lack of familiarity with what is actually played on the show lead me to discount him as some kind of crank, so I’ll go ahead and delete the reference to this being a national show until the website is updated to the point where something definitive can be found on what the show is claiming to be about. Dave - 137.186.223.97
One: I'm very familiar with what's actually played on the show; I listen to it every week.
Two: I'm most certainly not misrepresenting your point.
Three: I've heard of every band you single out here as "obscure", and they're obviously not known only in Southern Ontario, because CBC Radio 3 operates out of Vancouver and plays all of these acts regularly. So nobody in Toronto can stack the list in favour of his own preferred artists despite their purported lack of attention elsewhere. And you're going to have to back up the claim that the bands are unknown outside of Toronto, because it doesn't jibe with (a) the fact that a station based out of Vancouver plays them, (b) the fact that they've toured across Canada and gotten press coverage across Canada, (c) the fact that Jon-Rae and the River are from Vancouver, and only moved to Toronto within the past year or so, (d) the fact that campus radio across Canada has played all of the bands you single out as "obscure". Every last one of them made the national campus radio charts in 2006; every last one of them got press and blogosphere notice; every last one of them got into the CBC Radio 3 playlist (which, again, is programmed in Vancouver); every last one of them has toured across Canada and internationally. That you haven't heard of them doesn't make those facts any less true.
Four: both Shotgun & Jaybird and Great Aunt Ida are also on CBC Radio 3's playlist and on the R3-30 charts, so you really don't have a viable case that the CBC is somehow ignoring the "real" stuff. And, for the record, I've contributed to the Wikipedia articles on both Great Aunt Ida and Shotgun & Jaybird.
Five: you're certainly not going to be able to make any kind of convincing case that Kinnie Starr, Amy Millan, The Stills, The Hidden Cameras and Chad VanGaalen are too obscure for it to be worth mentioning that they've hit the #1 spot. That's certainly not any kind of Toronto-centrism; those are all internationally known acts. Tokyo Police Club, perhaps not so much, I grant you that. But they still got to #1 and have gotten attention in Rolling Stone.
Six: CBC Radio 3 is not restricted to playing exclusively Canadian music, and never was; that their main purpose is to promote up-and-coming Canadian indie acts doesn't mean they can't and don't throw the odd Tom Waits or The Decemberists into the mix. Their Canadian content requirement is 85 per cent, not 100 per cent.
Seven: campus radio charts are highly subjective, very much reflecting the personal tastes of DJs. So I fail to understand why subjectivity in a campus radio chart makes campus radio a bastion of musical integrity, while even the remotest possibility of that very same subjectivity entering into a CBC Radio 3 chart suddenly makes R3 some vast fraud being committed upon the taxpayers of Canada.
And, finally, seven: you can dismiss me as a crank all you like, but I'm a Wikipedia administrator — have been for a few years, actually — and there's no place for anyone's personal opinions in the article. Not yours, not mine. Bearcat 08:42, 29 December 2006 (UTC)Reply


I'm not going to get into this argument (actually I didn't even read the whole thing, so delete this comment if this is already being discussed) but I'm pretty sure that the R3-30 isn't just "determined by airplay, listener feedback and requests". I'm pretty the chart is somewhat of a human construct. I'm pretty sure the people who put the show together select the songs they do based on their own criteria. Sometimesthinking 06:13, 14 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

ye olde el sea edit

While I'm glad that this article is being maintained, I think the chart's been around long enough now that the listing all the #1 songs in the chart's history is quite clearly listcruft. Mentioning the very first #1, and the longest-running #1, might be acceptable as points of trivia, but reporting the entire history is going overboard. A seperate article for the #1's might work, or an external link to a page which keeps track of it. Anyway, unless there are intelligent, reasonable objections, I will be removing these lists by Monday or Tuesday. - Ugliness Man 06:00, 7 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

I'm sorry, I missed this because I was sick with a bacterial infection last week, and did miss some things on my watch, including this innocuous little note. I'm restoring the list, because a) the lack of response is not actually consensus that you should do this, and b) this does not in fact hit on *any* of the definitions of WP:LISTCRUFT. To wit, that list is:
  1. The list was created just for the sake of having such a list
  2. The list is of interest to a very limited number of people
  3. The list is a violation of Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate collection of information
  4. The content is unverifiable or the underlying concept is non-notable
  5. The list cannot be expanded beyond a handful of terms
  6. The list is unlimited and/or unmaintainable
  7. The list has no content beyond links to other articles, so would be better implemented as a (self-maintaining) category
  8. The list is unencyclopaedic, i.e. it would not be expected to be included in an encyclopaedia.
This list was created because it is of interest to people interested in this aspect of Canadian culture (in fact, the list has been used as a reference when discussing the possible deletion of other pages, such as The Western Investor (Null 1). I cannot speak to point #2, as I can only say that I'm definitely interested. It is not a violation of WP:NOT; this information is not indiscriminate (Null 3). It is verifiable and notable to people interested in Canadian indy music, which is entirely a tiny group (Null 4). It is expanded weekly (Null 5). It has a definite limit, and is maintainable as it has been maintained weekly (Null 6). 7 is non-applicable. 8 is possibly a point, if you also believe that every other list of number one songs should be removed, because the concept of number one songs is non-encyclopedic (votes for AfD have said this is not so in the eyes of the community, but you're free to bring this up again; this is much the same as attempts to have lists of smaller book awards, such as the Tiptrees, removed, and doesn't succeed).
So. Please to explain why this is listcruft? If anything, the length is simply an argument that it may be time to look into doing a by-year archive for people who are interested in this subject, rather than simply ditching the information because...there's too much of it.... --Thespian 05:47, 18 October 2007 (UTC)Reply
Fans of Canadian indy music is not a "very limited number of people", but people who need to have a record of all the #1 songs within an encyclopedic article probably is. As for "indiscriminate", it still seems to me that it's a list for the sake of a list. You say the list isn't "unlimited" because the obvious finite limit is that the list only contains songs which have reached #1 on the chart... however, this is not finite, because a new song will be added to the list week after week after week, making that portion of the article longer and longer. Eventually, the actual content of the article (I argue that a list isn't content, it's data) will seem like a mere blurb compared to the overbearing and superfluous list. As it is, the list takes up about half of the screen space in the article. As for your comparrison to the list of "smaller book awards", I don't see your point. Book awards are generally given annually, to a single title or a small list of titles. Currently, in the article for the Tiptrees, the list takes up a little less than half the screen space, but that's for over 15 years worth of awards. For every time that article has a new winner added, the R3-30 will have another 52. If you must keep it, turn it into an article of its own, perhaps an individial article for each year, but leaving it in the main chart article has already started to suggest a needless focus shift. - Ugliness Man 18:43, 18 October 2007 (UTC)Reply
A list that is 'unlimited' for Wikipedia purposes is one like the one mentioned on the examples page; 'List of Dog Names'. That can go on forever. This *is* considered a limited list, for WP purposes; it is expansive, but not unlimited - at any time, there are only so many songs that have reached #1, even if the future will provide more. Because there are only certain songs that can be included, it is finite, in spite of the fact the list grows. As to a needless focus shift, I don't think it is; the article is about a Top 30 Music List, and I don't actually see listing the top song on said Top 30 Music List as listcruft, when the article is about the nature of a list. Some articles are perfectly suited to containing lists, and this one is one of those, because it documents a list. That said, should we archive I think that the current year should remain in the article, and the previous years (2006 now, 2007 in 2 months, both of which will be, at the end of the year that they are, finite and documented lists, while the current year, which continues to change, should stay in the article) could merit their own pages, but I'd like to see input from someone else on this before making that change. Removing valid information that people have provably referred to isn't the answer. --Thespian 23:59, 18 October 2007 (UTC)Reply
While it's true that the list is starting to overpower the article's current length, most other record charts with articles on Wikipedia do have lists of their #1 singles here as well — the only difference, in most cases, is that their #1 lists are split off into separate list articles, rather than being contained directly in the parent article. Billboard Hot 100, for instance, has a separate list for each year from 1940 to 2007.
So, ultimately, splitting out is probably reasonable — it's just a matter of deciding how best to do that. We could (a) as Thespian suggests, split out past years only, leaving the current year in the article until year-end, (b) split all of it out into a single list, with the possibility of doing year-by-year lists in the future when the chart's been around for longer, or (c) split it out into year-by-year lists now even though there'd only be two of them at present.
But since lists of chart-toppers are maintained for other notable record charts, it's reasonable and valid to maintain one here; the only question is how best to organize that. Bearcat 01:24, 19 October 2007 (UTC)Reply
As to a needless focus shift, I don't think it is; the article is about a Top 30 Music List, and I don't actually see listing the top song on said Top 30 Music List as listcruft, when the article is about the nature of a list.
No, the article is about a chart show. The show does present a list of songs which have made the chart that week, then the next show presents the next list of songs which have made the chart that week. You're arguing that, in an article about dynamic chart show whose content changes week after week, the content of the article shouldn't be dynamic, but instead be static and cumulative, leaving all the old information on and adding the new #1 each week. Each week they talk about what the top 3 songs were the previous week, but they don't discuss all the songs that have topped the chart since the first show. It's obvious why this would be a dumb idea to do on the show, so I hardly see how an article about the show should be doing this. And I don't know how many times I have to restate this, but the damned list will keep growing and growing and growing and growing, and having something like that in the article will crowd out and the actual content. Either eliminate the list, or split it from the main article. But you know what? I'm done. I'm through arguing with you. If you're content to have an ugly article with an ever-expanding list that will make the article content less significant (and smaller by comparison) each week, then good luck to you. I'm taking this article off my watchlist because I am tired of arguing with someone who just doesn't get it. Good day. - Ugliness Man 18:55, 19 October 2007 (UTC)Reply
I'm terribly sorry you feel that way; you deleted it as listcruft, and I felt I had respectfully gone through why it clearly wasn't. I did not say 'it must stay there!' but instead said I wanted it to stay, but I was open to other places where it might be moved if people decided it should be. Another editor had already reverted your removal of the list, and while I did ask Bearcat, one of the main editors of the article, to weigh in, *all* I said to him was 'could you weigh in on this subject?'. But (and I mean this respectfully), I'm not married to my opinion; if others had said, 'yes, ditch the lists!' I'd have gone with that consensus. So while I am sorry you feel the need to leave watching this page as a result of my opinions, that might be for the best in this case.--Thespian 20:04, 19 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

If anyone else is still reading this, what about leaving the years on the page, but putting them in a collapsible section, so people can display them if they're interested, we don't spawn lots of extra pages, the info is there if people want it, but it doesn't distract from the core focus of the article unless the user expands it themselves? --Thespian 05:39, 21 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

No objection from this person who is still reading this. :) --Paul Erik 14:33, 21 October 2007 (UTC)Reply
The list should be kept. I don't think it is all that large at the moment, but it certainly is likely to become so over time. I think a collapsible version would be great. Strobilus 19:13, 21 October 2007 (UTC)Reply
I have, per this discussion, added the collapsible tables framing the lists, per my suggestion above and this consensus. Please let me know if there are any issues. --Thespian 07:54, 22 October 2007 (UTC)Reply
That's a fantastic solution. Thanks. Bearcat 15:45, 22 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

This article is terribly outdated edit

I don't have time to write this up, but the article should at least be updated to state that:

  • The 2012-05-26 podcast began with Craig announcing that Pedro was no longer involved with the R3-30. (I suppose that's also the last we'll hear of Jijou.)
  • Craig's last R3-30 podcast was released on 2013-02-01, as Craig departed Radio 3, for his new position at Radio 1. The show is now hosted by Lana Gay.
  • As of January 2013, the chart became "listener-determined", i.e. by votes entered on the CBC Music web site.

There's probably more that needs to be done, but again, I'm short on time at the moment. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 216.16.225.202 (talk) 17:46, 5 June 2013 (UTC)Reply